"Utopian and dystopian fiction" Essays and Research Papers

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    Elements of Dystopian Fiction A dystopia is a futuristic and imagined world where the illusion of a perfect society is created by a government or some other controlling force. A dystopia is the opposite of a utopia‚ which is an ideally perfect world and also tries to present itself as a utopia to its citizens. A dystopian novel is a book written about a dystopia that often criticizes some aspect of modern society and usually contains at least one character who realizes what is really going

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    The Giver

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    multiple types including social science‚ science fiction‚ and utopian and dystopian fiction. The main character’s name in the giver is Jonas. Jonas is a twelve year old boy who lives in a utopia. Jonas goes to the what we would call retirement home frequently to bathe old people. He goes there mainly to see Fiona one of his friends‚ the one he has stirrings about. The setting of “The Giver” is a utopian community that is part of a larger utopian society most likely on Earth. The time this takes

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    Dystopian Equality What is true equality? In humans‚ it would mean everyone is the same‚ but in nature‚ it is practically impossible to have true equality. Writers have often attempted to write about true equality within a utopian society. Harrison Bergeron by Kurt Vonnegut‚ Animal Farm by George Orwell‚ and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley are a few examples. However‚ in their writing‚ the authors end up portraying the opposite‚ a dystopian society. In Harrison Bergeron‚ Vonnegut uses the setting

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    When examining Fahrenheit 451 as a piece of dystopian fiction‚ a definition for the term "dystopia" is required. Dystopia is often used as an antonym of "utopia‚" a perfect world often imagined existing in the future. A dystopia‚ therefore‚ is a terrible place. You may find it more helpful (and also more accurate) to conceive a dystopian literary tradition‚ a literary tradition that’s created worlds containing reactions against certain ominous social trends and therefore imagines a disastrous future

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    Exploratory Essay Dystopian Literature "Writing is an exploration. You start from nothing and learn as you go." - E. L. Doctorow Why is it that dystopian stories always reveal some kind of utopia in them? When I hear this question I think about people trying to strive for utopia within their world. Their world doesn’t need to be a dystopia but in striving they make their current situation even worse. But it’s not possible to reach utopia‚ so in trying to reach that impossible thing you reach dystopia

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    What Makes A Dystopia?

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    or a place of “nowhere” as Thomas More puts it‚ a perfect place. Lyman Tower Sargent worked to define Utopia to establish a universal understanding of it‚ he was considered the first utopian scholar. He establishes the framework by discussing the three faces of Utopia‚ social contrivance‚ communitarians and utopian social theory. Sargent emphasizes that utopias are created when the dreamers solely vision a society that is better than their own. These dreamers write about these dream societies in

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    actions of utopian societies in their attempt to create a perfect world rather creates a dystopia” English Dublin Coffman High School School (3306) May 2014 Advisor: Timothy Flora Word count: 3977 Abstract This investigation outlines the fine line between utopias and dystopias. It assesses the topic of when and how the shift from a utopia to a dystopia can occur‚ analyzing the characteristics that make up a utopia and a dystopia. This investigation will examine two utopian/dystopian

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    The Chrysalids

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    Define the terms UTOPIA and DYSTOPIA‚ and discuss whether The Chrysalids can be considered a Utopian or a Dystopian novel. One could describe the novel "The Chrysalids" as a dystopian novel as apposed to utopian. The town in which David and the rest of shape-thinkers live is deffinatly not a utopia as well as the new land to which they move‚ Sealand. The dictionary definition of utopia is an imaginary island with perfect social & political system‚ social and political paradise

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    will discuss these aspects and effects and whether the Brave New World society is a utopia or a dystopia. A utopian society is one which is perfect (Mastin (2008)‚ What is a Utopia?). In the case of Brave New World: everyone has a job; all people live in harmony‚ meaning there is no war; there is a lack of poverty and crime. These things alone would mean this society is indeed utopian. Obviously there are many issues with our real society we live in‚ most of which are seen every day. People are

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    The Handmaid's Tale

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    The traditions of the utopian genre are constantly evolving for it to remain relevant to society’s present concerns. Thomas Moore’s novel “Utopia” written in 1516 was employed to mock the values of the Absolute Monarchy of England. Moore protests against the notion of failed idealisms within his society‚ presenting an alternative solution of an equal island‚ Utopia‚ which in actual fact translates to ‘no place’. From the suggestion of a complementary world where things run smoother‚ has seen the

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